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What is an Abstract?

An abstract is a summary of your final project report or thesis.

The English abstract doesn’t need to be a direct translation of the Finnish one.
The main thing is that the abstract

  • informative but concise
  • clear and logical
  • easy to read.

When?

  • Write the English abstract after your advisor has approved the Finnish abstract.

  • Linguistic research, writing the text, and editing the language and style may take up more time than you expect – anything between 3 and 8 hours.

  • You can write the abstract on your own, or attend an abstract writing workshop.

  • Send the whole thesis/report to the designated English instructor for language check 10 days before the final deadline:

    Anu Pekkarinen: Film and Television, 3D, Graphic Design, Digital Media, Live Performance Engineering
    Camilla Hällstén: Music
    Minna Paananen-Porkka: Media production

What is 'Opinnäytetyö' in English?

AMK

  • final project (report)
    your study includes an artistic or a development project and a written report reflecting on the process and the results

  • a Bachelor's thesis
    a dissertation reporting on and discussing the results of original research and substantiating a specific view

YAMK

  • a research and development project (report)
    your study includes an artistic or a development project and a written report reflecting on the process and the results

  • a Master's thesis
    a dissertation reporting on and discussing the results of original research and substantiating a specific view

Form

Write the abstract into the table on the third page of the report template.

Title

  • Short, clear, informative and interesting
  • Don’t translate the original title word for word, but express it clearly in plain English
  • Write the English Title in Title Case. Metropolia house style: All Words in Upper Case, Except Articles, Conjunctions and Prepositions

Advisors

  • Advisor's Name, Academic Title or Job Title (or both), e.g.,
           Heikki Heikkilä, M.A.
           Marja Marjanen, D.Mus.

Body of the Abstract

  • 250 – 300 words, including articles and prepositions
  • 4 - 5 paragraphs with a blank line between them
  • Do not indent the first line of the paragraph

Content

  • Introduction: Who has done what?
  • Methodology: When, where and how was the study or project carried out?
  • Results and conclusions: What did you learn during the process?
  • Discussion: Why is the research topic or project important? Who might benefit from the results of your work? What should be done next?

 

Language and Style

Language Help

  • Finnish-English Dictionary (Tuubi - MOT sanakirjasto, link on the left)
  • Specialist dictionaries and glossaries (e.g. A Glossary of Video Editing Terms)
  • Collocations dictionaries (which adjectives, nouns, verbs and prepositions can be matched together?)
    Oxford Collocations Dictionary
  • Monolingual dictionaries (definitions and grammar)
    The Free Dictionary
  • Google expressions "in quotations marks" and see if the expression is used in relevant and reliable contexts.

Write the abstract

  • in the first person (My thesis investigates... My final project is a...) or
  • in the third person (The author studied... The author carried out a survey...)

The text should be

  • formal, but the sentences should be short and simple
  • accessible (easy to read)
  • cohesive (ideas are logically connected)

Check spelling and grammar

  • MS Word 2010:
    Review / Language / Set Proofing Language
    Review / Spelling and Grammar

Final Touches

  • Send the whole report/thesis to your designated English instructor as  Word document (not a pdf).
  • When you get the instructor’s comments, edit the text and send it back to her once more for final approval.

 

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